I've asked several successful and very specific SO questions with minimal reproducible examples (MRE) and understand the importance of same.
I now have the unusual situation of a screen shot from a few weeks ago that at the time I thought was humorous, but now realize it might be worth tracking down what happened.
I thought it was humorous because I'd never seen "stack overflow" in a Python error message like
Fatal Python error: Cannot recover from stack overflow.
Most of us can recover from Stack Overflow with a good night's sleep.
Is it impossible to ask https://stackoverflow.com/q/70728180/3904031 on Stack Overflow, or was there some way I could have? (the question is currently deleted, so it's now viewable only to higher-rep users)
I'm clearly not asking what the error is, I'm asking if it's rare enough that I should then go ahead and try to reproduce it so that I can then generate an MRE.
Would this somehow be possible? Would there have been a different way to phrase it?
note: I realized that the question's close votes were triggered (at least in part) by the debugging tag, so I've removed that tag. The question itself is not about debugging.
stack overflow
errors? If so should I try to go back and figure out what happened here to document it?"abc.py
so the question is if matplotlib should have trapped it or not. I'm getting the distinct impression that my concern for matplotlib is misplaced; I solved my problem by removing the bad value for the argument, perhaps I shouldn't worry about matplotlib not trapping it? Perhaps "do the right thing" is not so appreciated?